Thursday, January 27, 2022

Lifeguards Silenced Supernaturally

  •  
     
     

    This is a request by :icontohoscopeda20: for Molly McGee of Disney's The Ghost and Molly McGee, Dynamite Entertainment's Vampirella, and Mewberty for Princess Star Butterfly of Disney's Star Vs. The Forces OF Evil are bound and gagged life guards.

    Molly McGee is the titular main protagonist of The Ghost and Molly McGee. She is a Thai-American girl who became friends with a grumpy ghost named Scratch, who after a curse he tries to put on her backfires, ends up cursed forever by Molly's presence.

    Molly and her family relocate to Brighton, a sleepy little town. Molly has spent her life travelling throughout the country and has never had time to develop friends, so when she comes across a ghost named Scratch who is chained to her house by an impenetrable curse, she immediately names him as her best friend. Molly is afraid of stifling everyone around her, of being labeled as an outcast who will be shunned by anyone she attempts to connect with. She has previously failed to build meaningful ties with individuals.

    Molly is an optimistic Thai-American girl, who lives to make the world a better place. She loves to give hugs and owns up quickly and tries to fix her mistakes, and is very imaginative. She is also energetic and caring to her friends.

    However, despite her caring nature, Molly can be sometimes selfish and pushy such as in "mazel Tov, Libby!" where she transformed Libby's Bat Mitzvah into a blowout party and forcing her to "come out of her shell," instead of respecting her friend's wishes and boundaries.

    At times like "Scratch the Surface," she can also get restless and overthink easily, making her prone to lying.

    She shows a sense of na star ivety in "Scratch the Surface" as well, still believing that wizards and unicorns are real despite already being a tween.

    Although generally gregarious, Molly does have some degree of savagery, mostly applied on bratty people namely Andrea Davenport, such as when Andrea stole her show in "Hooray for Mollywood!".

    In "Saving Christmas," after failing to change the stubbornness of Mr Davenport, Molly descended into a depression, losing her care for Christmas. This proves that Molly's optimism can be broken.

    Vampirella
    is a fictional character, a comic book vampire superheroine created by Forrest J Ackerman and comic book artist Trina Robbins in Warren Publishing's black-and-white horror comics magazine Vampirella #1 (Sept. 1969). Writer-editor Archie Goodwin later developed the character from horror-story hostess, in which capacity she remained through issue #8 (Nov. 1970), to a horror-drama leading character. Vampirella was ranked 35th in Comics Buyer's Guide's "100 Sexiest Women in Comics" list.


    Vampirella was originally presented as an inhabitant of the planet Drakulon, a world where a vampiric race lived on blood and where blood flowed in rivers. Drakulon orbits twin suns that were causing droughts across the planet, marking certain doom for Vampirella and her race. The race of which Vampirella was born, the Vampiri, were able to transform themselves into bats at will, possessed superhuman physical attributes, sprout wings when required to fly, and drink blood. The story begins with the inhabitants of Drakulon dying slowly due to the drying up of its blood. The last few lie dying when a spaceship from Earth crashes on the planet. Vampirella, sent to investigate, is attacked; retaliating, she discovers that the astronauts have blood in their veins. In order for her race to survive, she manages to pilot the ship back to Earth where her adventures begin. Vampirella becomes a "good" vampire, and devotes her energy to ridding our world of the evil kind. Evil vampires owe their existence to Dracula, who came from Drakulon but was corrupted by Chaos.

    Princess Star Butterfly is the main protagonist of Star vs.the Forces of Evil. She is a teenage princess of the kingdom of Mewni (located in another dimension) sent to Earth  by her parents in order to learn how to use the royal magic wand. She currently lives with her earthly hosts, the Diaz family.

    Star is very energetic and friendly. She loves having fun and usually has an optimistic outlook on life. She loves to help others and whenever she sees that someone is upset, she does her best to cheer them up. Strangers, in her eyes, are just friends she has not met yet, and she feels bad if she hurts someone's feelings, whether intentionally or not. Star has a happy-go-lucky attitude and always tries to put a smile on everyone's faces. She also works very hard towards her goals, so much so that she will sometimes end up greatly sleep-deprived.

    Owing to her rather sheltered upbringing, Star's optimism and enthusiasm can border on recklessness, to the point of endangering the people around her with her madcap antics. She has rather simplistic views on concepts such as leadership and responsibility, believing that prioritizing fun above all else matters the most. All this, coupled with her lack of understanding of Earth customs, often puts her and Marco in strange, dangerous situations. While rarely ever angry, she does express annoyance towards people who do not take her seriously or give her the attention she wants. Although she treats her friends kindly and rarely holds grudges against them, she is usually brutal towards her enemies.

    She also holds a prejudice against monsters, believing they are "born bad", though this opinion softens a little as of "Mewnipendance Day".

    She sometimes chews on the top of the wand, in something of a tic.

    "Cheer Up. Star" shows that she has coulrophobia (a fear of clowns) but by "Royal Pain", she seems to have gotten over it, since there was a clown creature in her room, and she did not seem to mind its presence.

    In "Sleep Spells", she is revealed to have issues with her mother.

    Mewberty is a phase that Mewman teenage girls go through which is the equivalent of Earth's puberty.  Star Butterfly goes through it in the episode the episode of the same name.

    The phase is initially triggered by the presence of people whom the afflicted girl is attracted to, which causes purple hearts to steadily appear all over their body until it is fully engulfed (in Star's case, this happened whenever she was around any boy from school). This causes the subject to undergo many changes, including change of skin color, growing six arms, heightened senses, large wings capable of flight, and an insatiable urge to cocoon others. Once mewberty is complete, the subject returns back to normal, albeit with a set of tiny, vestigial wings.

    At the end of Star vs. the Forces of Evil: The Battle for Mewni, Star gains a new butterfly form with six arms, an orange and gold dress and boots, longer horns on her headband, and large, golden butterfly wings. Following the events of "Deep Dive," she can control this form at will.

    In Star and Marco's Guide to Mastering Every Dimension, Star describes the phase as "suddenly looking at boys as if they were made of bacon, like you've never eaten it in your life, and all you want to eat is bacon."

    In at least Star and Moon Butterfly's cases, a person can morph in and out of their butterfly forms once they reach full maturity. This is referred to in Star vs. the Forces of Evil: The Book of Spells as their "Ultimate Magic Form" or "Butterfly".

    This form allows the user to fly, open portals without dimensional scissors, and cast spells without a wand, although Star claims it to be more tiring without one. It also greatly enhances the user's physical strength and magic power, demonstrated when Star lifts the Goblin Dogs truck and breaks the chains binding her to her bed, and when she faces Meteora Butterfly in "Conquer."


     

No comments:

Post a Comment